Regional life expectancy has fallen by three years since 2013
Spikes in the number of deaths from drug overdoses, homicide, heart disease and COVID-19 led to a three-year drop in life expectancy in the Finger Lakes region from 2013 to 2021.
The average life expectancy for the region peaked at 80.5 years in 2013 before falling to 77.3 years by 2021. The drop that started in 2013 erased all the gains in life expectancy recorded from 2000 to 2012. This is according to a new data spotlight on life expectancy for the nine-county Finger Lakes region recently released by Common Ground Health. The analysis was based on information from the New York State Department of Health Vital Statistics.
Life expectancy declines were largest for people of color and people living in ZIP codes with low socioeconomic status, leading to the largest gap in life expectancies since at least 2000. In 2021, those living in low SES ZIP codes had a life expectancy that was 9.2 years lower than those living in high SES ZIP codes. Life expectancies fell 7.5 years for Black non-Latino residents and 6.8 years for Latino residents from their respective peaks. In contrast, the life expectancy of White residents declined only 2.5 years.
“The color of your skin or amount of resources in your neighborhood should not determine how long you live,” said Wade Norwood, CEO of Common Ground Health. “We know how to close these gaps: we can reverse overdoses, we can de-escalate violence and we can prevent drug addiction, heart disease and COVID. What we need is continued commitment to public health preventative measures and immediate action to ensure that everyone is able to live a long and healthy life.”
The spotlight is available at http://www.commongroundhealth.org/lifeexpectancy24.
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